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correcting plate tiqe-ye aršâyandé, ~ aršâgar Fr.: lame correctrice A large glass plate placed at the entrance of a Schmidt telescope to correct for spherical aberration over the large field of view. |
correction aršâyeš Fr.: correction 1) The act or process of correcting. Noun form of → correct. |
corrector aršâyandé, ~ aršâgar Fr.: correcteur A thin lens-like optical piece which removes certain optical aberrations. |
correlate hambâzânidan Fr.: corréler 1) To place in or bring into causal or mutual relation. |
correlation hambâzâneš Fr.: corrélation General:
The degree to which two or more attributes or measurements on the
same group of elements show a tendency to vary together;
the state or relation of being correlated. From M.Fr. corrélation, from cor- "together," → com- + → relation. |
correlation coefficient hamgar-e hambâzâneš Fr.: coefficient de corrélation A number between -1 and 1 which measures the degree to which two variables are linearly related. → correlation; → coefficient. |
correlator hambâzângar Fr.: corrélateur In radio astronomy a general term for → autocorrelator and → cross-correlator. |
correlogram hambâzâneš-negâr Fr.: corrélogramme A plot showing a summary of correlation at different periods of time. Correlo-, from → correlation; → -gram. |
correspond hampatvâzidan Fr.: correspondre To be in agreement, harmony, or conformity; to be similar or equivalent in character, quantity, origin, structure, or function. From O.Fr. Fr. correspondre, from M.L. correspondere from cor-, → com-, + respondere "to answer," → response. Hampatvâzidan, from ham-, → com-, + patvâz "response" [Mo'in], from Mid.Pers. patvâc "response," Av. paitivak- + -idan infinitive suffix. |
correspondence hampatvâzi Fr.: correspondance The act, fact, or state of agreeing or conforming. Verbal noun from → correspond. |
correspondence principle parvaz-e hampatvâzi Fr.: principe de correspondance The principle first put forward by N. Bohr according to which the behavior of quantum mechanical laws reduce to classical laws in the limit of large quantum numbers. → correspondence; → principle. |
Corvus Kalâq (#) Fr.: Corbeau The Crow. A small but fairly conspicuous → constellation in the Southern Hemisphere lying south and west of → Virgo and east of → Crater. L. corvus "raven," Gk. korax "raven," korone "crow," PIE base *qer-, *qor-, imitative of harsh sounds, cf. Pers. kalâq, Skt. kâkola- "raven." Kalâq, Mid.Pers. warag, varâq "crow," Lori qelâ, Kordi qel, cf. Skt. kâkola- "raven," PIE base *qer-, *qor-, as above. |
cosecant kosekânt (#) Fr.: cosecante The → secant of the complement of an arc or angle; abbreviation csc. If θ is an → acute angle of a → right triangle, csc θ = → hypotenuse/(opposite side). |
cosine kosinus (#) Fr.: cosinus A trigonometric function giving the ratio of the side adjacent to a given angle to the hypotenuse. |
cosmic keyhâni (#) Fr.: cosmique Of or relating to the → Universe (instead of universal which may lend to confusion), to the → outer space. Adj. from → cosmos |
cosmic acceleration šetâb-e keyhâni Fr.: accélération cosmique → cosmic; → acceleration. |
Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) puyešgar-e zamin-ye keyhâni Fr.: Satellite COBE NASA's satellite, designed to measure the diffuse infrared and → cosmic microwave background radiation from the early → Universe. It was launched on November 18, 1989 and carried three instruments: DIRBE (the Diffuse InfraRed Experiment), DMR (Differential Microwave Radiometers), and FIRAS (Far-InfraRed Absolute Spectrophotometer). The COBE observations showed that the cosmic microwave background spectrum matches that of a → blackbody of temperature 2.725 ± 0.002 K. COBE also found anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background at a level of a part in 100,000 (→ cosmic microwave background anisotropy). These tiny variations in the intensity of the CMB over the sky show how matter and energy was distributed when the Universe was still very young. Later, through a process still poorly understood, the early structures developed into galaxies, galaxy clusters, and the large scale structure that we see in the Universe today. Two of COBE's principal investigators, George Smoot and John Mather, received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2006 for their work on the project. → cosmic; → background; → explorer. |
cosmic background radiation tâbeš-e paszaminé-ye keyhâni Fr.: rayonnement du fond cosmique → cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR). → cosmic; → background; → radiation. |
Cosmic Dark Age asr-e târik-e keyhâni Fr.: âge sombre cosmique The period of time in the early history of the Universe, between the → recombination era and the advent of the → first stars. |
cosmic defect âk-e keyhâni Fr.: défaut cosmique Topological irregularities in the → space-time → continuum, caused by the abrupt cooling of the → early Universe shortly after the → Big Bang, as predicted by some → cosmological models. These regions of immensely high density might have been the seeds of → structure formation through → gravity. Same as → topological defect. |
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